Early History, Prehistory

Similar documents
The History Of Wildlife Conservation and Management In North America. Chapter Objectives

THE WOLF WATCHERS. Endangered gray wolves return to the American West

Copyright 2018 by Jamie L. Sandberg

Management History of the Edwards Plateau

Mule and Black-tailed Deer

Stakeholder Activity

DMU 047 Livingston County Deer Management Unit

Deer Management in Maryland. Brian Eyler Deer Project Leader Maryland DNR

The Greater Sage-Grouse:

Chapter 14. Wildlife, Fisheries and Endangered Species. What are we Saving? Traditional Single-Species Wildlife Management

Job Title: Game Management, Subsection B Game Management Mountain Lion. SPECIES: Mountain Lion

Colorado West Slope Mule Deer Strategy Public Engagement Report

Sustaining Wild Species

DMU 038 Jackson County

DMU 065 Ogemaw County Deer Management Unit

"Oh! Deer! & Limiting Factors" adapted from Project Wild Mr. Mark Musselman Audubon at the Francis Beidler Forest

Graphing population size daily Review Deer: Predation or Starvation

Job Title: Game Management, Subsection B Game Management Mountain Lion. SPECIES: Mountain Lion

The Lesson of the Kaibab

Controlled Take (Special Status Game Mammal Chapter)

Wildlife Management. Wildlife Management. Geography 657

Reduction in Biological Diversity Section 4.1 p Section 4.3 p

Science Skills Station

RANCHING Wildlife. Texas White-Tailed Deer 2017 Hunting Forecast

DMU 361 Fremont Deer Management Unit Newaygo, Oceana, N. Muskegon Counties

DMU 008 Barry County Deer Management Unit

Peace Region Wildlife Regulations Proposed Changes for Comment ( )

ALBERTA WILDERNESS ASSOCIATION. Hunting, Trapping, and Fishing

Job Title: Game Management, Subsection B Game Management Mountain Lion

DMU 332 Huron, Sanilac and Tuscola Counties Deer Management Unit

Wildlife/Conservation Activities Wisconsin 4-H Shooting Sports

Conservation Worksheet III

DMU 046 Lenawee County Deer Management Unit

Canon Envirothon Wildlife Curriculum Guidelines

Wildlife and American Sport Hunting

CHECKS AND BALANCES. OVERVIEW Students become managers of a herd of animals in a paper-pencil, discussionbased

Deer Management in Maryland -Overview. Brian Eyler Deer Project Leader

Questionnaire for Aboriginal Traditional Knowledge Interviews on Boreal Caribou LONG VERSION

Competition. Competition. Competition. Competition. Competition. Competition. Competition. Long history in ecology

IMPLEMENTING REGULATIONS OF THE WILDLIFE CONSERVATION LAW. Authorized by the Republic of China Wildlife Conservation Law, amended October 29, 1994.

Biology B / Sanderson!

Jeffrey M. Ver Steeg Colorado Parks and Wildlife. December 14, 2016

Transition: Wild Horse & Burro Management

DMU 452 Northern Multi-County Deer Management Unit

Regents Biology LAB. NATURAL CONTROLS OF POPULATIONS

2015 Deer Population Goal Setting

DESCRIBE THE HABITAT REQUIREMENTS AND OTHER FACTORS THAT AFFECT WILDLIFE SPECIES NATURAL RESOURCE I FISHERY AND WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT OBJECTIVE 5.

Teton County Related Hunting and Fishing Spending, For the Wyoming Wildlife Federation. David T. Taylor & Thomas Foulke

2017 LATE WINTER CLASSIFICATION OF NORTHERN YELLOWSTONE ELK

Minnesota Elk Past and Present. Minnesota Department of Natural Resources Division of Wildlife Thief Lake Wildlife Management Area

Coyotes. The coyote, considered by many as a symbol of the Old West, now resides

White-tailed Deer: A Review of the 2010 Provincially Coordinated Hunting Regulation

DMU 072 Roscommon County Deer Management Unit

San Luis Valley National Wildlife Refuge Complex, CO; Availability of Record of

Florida s Freshwater Fisheries. Mike S. Allen Mark W. Rogers Galen Kaufman. Chris M. Horton

NEWS RELEASE. Harvest allocation ensures certainty for hunting sector

Street Edmonton, AB T6K 1T8. Alberta Fish and Game Association (AFGA) Position On Game Farming In Alberta February 2004

Wildlife Management A Complex Issue

MODULE 2. Conservation needs of cheetah and wild dogs and related threats to their survival. Notes:

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Feasibility Study on the Reintroduction of Gray Wolves to the Olympic Peninsula

Marker, L. (2005). Aspects of ecology, biology and conservation strategies of Namibian farmland cheetahs. Animal Keeper's Forum 7/8.

Mountain Caribou Recovery Implementation Plan. Predator/Prey Component. Terms of Reference

March 14, Public Opinion Survey Results: Restoration of Wild Bison in Montana

Job Title: Game Management, Subsection B Game Management Predator and Furbearer Management. SPECIES: Predatory and Furbearing Mammals

ALBERTA FISH & GAME ASSOCIATION 2015 ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING PASSED RESOLUTIONS FEBRUARY 21, 2015

a) Case Study: North American Bison/Wood Buffalo b) Species Diversity/Richness

Hunting for Sustainability Conservation and local, free-range protein. Keith Warnke WDNR

make people aware of the department s actions for improving the deer population monitoring system,

Secretary Game Animal Panel PO Box 9134 Addington CHRISTCHURCH 8243

Spring 2012 Wild Turkey Harvest Report

Modeling Population Decline

Frequently Asked Questions and Answers Regarding the Draft Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem (NCDE) Conservation Strategy

Frequently Asked Questions Reintroduction of Bison to Banff National Park

DMU 419 Clinton, Eaton, Ingham, Ionia, and Shiawassee Counties

RE: Request for Audit of Ineligible Federal Aid Grants to Alaska Department of Fish & Game for Support of Predator Management

UNIT 4: Extinction Announcements: wrap up Unit 4 Endangered species groups

NATURAL CONTROLS OF POPULATIONS: 3 CASE STUDIES

Job Title: Game Management, Subsection B Game Management Mountain Lion. SPECIES: Mountain Lion

Mule Deer. Dennis D. Austin. Published by Utah State University Press. For additional information about this book

Back To. Nature. by Dale Deckman. White-Tailed Deer

Healthy Planet. legacy circle

DMU 053 Mason County Deer Management Unit

Invasive Versus Endemic Species

OREGON DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE FIELD STAFF RESPONSE FOR COUGAR INFORMATION AND CONFLICT SITUATIONS

Fremont County Related Hunting and Fishing Spending, 2015

2009 Update. Introduction

RESOURCE BOOKLET N10/4/ENVSO/SP2/ENG/TZ0/XX/T ENVIRONMENTAL SYSTEMS AND SOCIETIES PAPER 2. Wednesday 3 November 2010 (morning) 2 hours

Population Ecology Yellowstone Elk by C. John Graves

White-Tailed Deer Management FAQ

WLD 585/785 Wildlife Resource Policy & Administration

STUDENT PACKET # 6 Student Exploration: Rabbit Population by Season

Carbon County Related Hunting and Fishing Spending, 2015

Living World Review #2

Burns Paiute Tribe Fisheries Department. Evaluate The Life History Of Native Salmonids Within The Malheur Subbasin Project #

April Nisga a Fisheries & Wildlife Department

FINAL ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT ON RESIDENT CANADA GOOSE MANAGEMENT Questions and Answers

Sustainable use of wildlife in the context of the GIZ Regional Programme in Central Asia

Predator Prey Lab Exercise L2

U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service International Affairs Program

The National Wildlife Refuge System. The National Wildlife Refuge System

Transcription:

History of Management of Large Mammals in North America What experience and history teach us is this that nations and governments have never learned anything from history, or acted upon any of the lessons they might have drawn from it. G.W.F. Hagel Early History, Prehistory North America Hunters, hunter-gatherers, farmers Big game important for food, trade, best nutrition Farming: support large populations, reduced nutrition Advent of horses: Plains people abandoned farming No domesticated large mammals Pleistocene survivors unsuitable for domestication Early History, Prehistory Distribution and abundance of species varied Climate, rainfall patterns Use by natives, native population size Landscape changes by native use Fires set by natives Farming, farmland Early History, Prehistory Use, exploitation, long history of admiration (artwork, symbolism, etc.) Some knowledge of natural history, behavior No organized efforts to control populations Wildlife Management involves human effort to control wildlife through specific population or habitat management practices. The road to modern wildlife management was a long and winding path. 1

2

Abundance and Exploitation Early colonization period: Huge abundance of wildlife Commercial value Food Danger to stock Values Commodity Nuisance Use open to all No sense of sport hunting Basic Formula for the Era of Abundance and Exploitation Colonists arrive Exploit wildlife resources Wildlife populations decline Colonists move west, begin again Occurred repeatedly as the continent was settled At some point- nowhere left to go Continuing Settlement, Exploitation Colonization of the western US Louisiana Purchase Trapping Homestead Act Gold rushes Mining, farming, grazing, logging Effects on populations, habitats Subsistence, market hunting Erosion, overgrazing, clear-cutting Response to Exploitation Depleted populations, realization Restrictions on hunting, take Ineffective Not enforced Not all species: deer, but not elk, wood bison, carnivores Rise of sport hunting After settlement of western US, pioneer era 3

Rise of Conservation Rapid declines and reduced abundance = wake-up call for many Sportsmen s clubs, game organizations Boone & Crockett, Audubon Society First sporting magazines, journals Field and Stream, etc. First books on natural history Rise of Conservation Hunting regulations Laws, licenses, bag limits, seasons Enforcement was a problem First game agencies founded Law enforcement, not active conservation Lack of funds, coordination Pittman-Robertson Act Lack of training Rise of Conservation Focus on predator control Establishment of refuges Active efforts Restocking Translocation Winter feeding Rise of Conservation Increased federal involvement US Army management of Yellowstone Legislation extended, clarified federal role National Forest Reserves Act Formation of US Forest Service Only trained personnel (Forest Service) Gifford Pinchot, Aldo Leopold Rise of Conservation State-federal clashes Kaibab, Pisgah (overpopulation) Public mindset Indoctrinated to conservation Pre Smokey the Bear syndrome Federal authority clear, but. Policy of state-federal cooperation Resident game animal management as a state-federal partnership Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act 4

Birth of Science-based Management (1920 1940) Aldo Leopold Science of game management Goal of sustained yield (hunting) Preservation gives way to management, use Preservation/protection alone insufficient Created Kaibab, Pisgah No theory of wildlife ecology No scientific studies/articles prior to 1920! Birth of Science-based Management (1920 1940) Professional game management programs Trained professionals First standardized surveys Accumulation of scientific literature, texts Theory developed Carrying capacity Realization big game = large influence on plant, animal communities Harvest recommendations Birth of Science-based Management (1920 1940) Problems with public perception Preservation ingrained, traditional Not ancient history still happening!! Opposed to liberal harvests Bag limits Either-sex permits Hard to convince the public Inexperienced persons can t see browse lines Expanded research and information programs Intensive Management (1940 1970) Intensive Management (1940 1970) Management objectives: Develop and sustain populations, habitat Ensure maximum production and use of game Provide maximum recreational opportunity Concentrated on popular or abundant species Deer, elk Later focus on others such as sheep, antelope, etc. Monitoring systems established Herd units Refined survey techniques Harvest data, trends Objective often maximum populations Multiple use management Understand interaction of game, habitat, etc. Coordinate game and land management Landowner assistance programs 5

Intensive Management (1940 1970) Most populations restored Management focus and emphasis changed Different policies Refuges not as important as safe haven Harvest regulations and bag limits Predator control declined Most populations restored Overabundance problems Exotic species Management focus and emphasis changed Endangered Species Act = federal mandate Protection, management of large carnivores Trend from individual species landscape, ecosystem New Challenges Mule deer declines, Caribou fluctuations Current knowledge couldn t explain Theory and practice developed under 1 set of conditions (increasing populations) were not applicable when conditions changed Need for more data New Challenges = new technology Radiotelemetry Increases in computers, computer power GIS Genetic markers Better data on movements, behavior, survival Analyze more complex problems Predict changes Tie population changes to landscape, habitat Public perceptions, involvement Early: hunters, sportsmen Now: all aspects of public involved, fewer hunters Legislation National Environmental Policy Act Endangered Species Act Federal Land Policy and Management Act Change in how public lands, wildlife administered Management, recovery programs for grizzly, wolf, etc. Most scientific knowledge of wildlife generated in the past 50 years Also, management agencies, funding, training What will happen in the next 50 years? Overabundance Changes in land use Disease concerns 6

7

8

9